Complex Spatiotemporal Antiphase Oscillations during

Adrian Bîrzu, Florian Plenge, Nils I. Jaeger, John L. Hudson, and Katharina ... Germany, Fritz Haber Institute of the Max Planck Society, Faradayweg ...
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J. Phys. Chem. B 2003, 107, 5825-5835

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Complex Spatiotemporal Antiphase Oscillations during Electrodissolution of a Metal Disk Electrode: Model Calculations Adrian Bıˆrzu,†,‡ Florian Plenge,‡ Nils I. Jaeger,§ John L. Hudson,| and Katharina Krischer*,†,‡ Department of Physics, Technical UniVersity of Mu¨nchen, James-Franck-Strasse 1, 85748 Garching, Germany, Fritz Haber Institute of the Max Planck Society, Faradayweg 4-6, 14195 Berlin, Germany, Institute for Applied and Physical Chemistry, UniVersity of Bremen, FB 2-Biology/Chemistry, Postfach 330 440, 28334 Bremen, Germany, and Department of Chemical Engineering, 102 Engineers’ Way, UniVersity of Virginia, CharlottesVille, Virginia 22904-4741 ReceiVed: NoVember 20, 2002; In Final Form: February 19, 2003

Pattern formation in electrochemical systems depends sensitively on the relative arrangement of the electrodes. We present simulations of spatiotemporal patterns during the electrodissolution of a metal disk electrode in which the reference electrode is located on the axis of the disk and close to the metal working electrode. This geometry introduces a strong but asymmetric negative feedback which tends to destabilize the homogeneous potential distribution. We demonstrate that the feedback gives rise to a variety of complex antiphase-type patterns. Some of these patterns have been observed in experiments; others present novel manifestations of dynamic instabilities in electrochemical systems.

1. Introduction It is well-known that electrochemical systems often undergo oscillatory instabilities, resulting in macroscopic oscillations of the total current and the average electrode potential.1-3 More recent experimental4-22 and theoretical23-34 studies revealed that the oscillations are often not homogeneous but are accompanied by the formation of spatial patterns. A peculiar property of electrochemical pattern formation is its sensitive dependence on the precise geometry of the cell, in particular on the relative positions of the electrodes (see, e.g., the review articles in refs 35 and 36). This follows from the fact that in electrochemical systems the dominant spatial coupling along the electrode is through the electric field in the electrolyte. Suppose the potential distribution at the double layer changes locally, e.g., due to a local fluctuation. Then, the potential distribution in the entire electrolyte will adjust and thus also the double-layer potential distribution at the interface. Hence, different positions along the electrode are coupled together through the electric field. This type of coupling has been termed “migration coupling”.33,35,36 For given electrode potentials, the forms, sizes, and positions of the working (WE) and the counter (CE) electrodes mainly determine the electric potential distribution through the electrolyte, and therefore, the spatial coupling can be tuned by varying, e.g., the distance between the WE and the CE.25 A metal/insulator transition in the plane of the WE, such as that in the case of disk electrodes, further complicates the situation because it excludes the existence of strictly homogeneous states.33,36 Rather, the metal-insulator transition causes the homogeneous dynamics as well as the migration coupling to depend on space. In addition, the potentiostatic control in a three electrode setup introduces a feedback into the system which can alter the * Corresponding author. E-mail: [email protected]. † Technical University of Mu ¨ nchen. ‡ Fritz-Haber Institute of the Max Planck Society. § University of Bremen. | University of Virginia.

stability of the states and the pattern formation drastically.19,29-32,37-39 The origin of this feedback becomes plausible keeping in mind that a local change of the electrode potential causes a redistribution of the electric potential throughout the electrolyte, i.e., also at the position at which the RE probes the electrolyte potential (e.g., at the tip of a Haber-Luggin capillary). Hence, the actual and the set potential difference between the WE and the RE differ, and the potentiostat changes the Galvani potential of the WE (or, equivalently, of the CE) such that the potentiostatic constraint (U ) φDL + IR, where U is the set voltage, φDL the electrode potential, and IR the potential drop through the electrolyte between the WE and the RE) is again fulfilled. Obviously, this feedback affects all positions of the WE. In this respect, it is a global feedback. However, defining a global feedback in a more strict sense, namely, that the local dynamics depends on the aVerage of a system’s variable, a global coupling through the potentiostatic control is realized only in cases in which every point on the WE has the same distance to the RE. This is only fulfilled for (quasi-one-dimensional) ring electrodes if the RE is located on the axis of the ring. In this case, bringing the RE closer to the WE is identical in terms of the dynamics to inserting a negative Ohmic resistor in series to the WE.40 In all other cases and, in particular, for all two-dimensional electrodes, and hence also for the disk electrodes considered in this paper, the feedback depends on a weighted average of the electrode potential. For simplicity we will use the term “global coupling” also in this situation. Thus, we do not use it in the strict sense but include this more general type of feedback. Analyzing the effect of the global feedback on the local evolution of the electrode potential, it was shown that the feedback drives the electrode potential at every position away from the average electrode potential, i.e., if the local potential value is larger than the average electrode potential, it is driven to still larger values, and if it is smaller, it becomes even smaller due to the global coupling (see, e.g., the review article in ref 36). Such a global coupling is called a negative global coupling. It tends to favor the formation of patterns.

10.1021/jp022457w CCC: $25.00 © 2003 American Chemical Society Published on Web 05/13/2003

5826 J. Phys. Chem. B, Vol. 107, No. 24, 2003

Bıˆrzu et al.

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